Wednesday, July 8, 2020

Less is More in Your Application Essays

Most of us have heard the saying â€Å"less is more,† but how many of us put it into practice when it counts? Your application essays are the perfect forum for reaping the benefits of this deceptively simple principle. What does â€Å"less is more† really mean? It’s the idea that we must resist our natural tendencies to overplay our hands, to choose complexity over simplicity, to include unnecessary details, to say what needn’t be said, to be redundant†¦See what I did there? Often, more information is of less value in getting your point across. Every day we have multiple opportunities to explain ourselves, demonstrate our skills, or express something: speaking in class or at a meeting for work; trying to convince our friends, colleagues, parents, or children of something; or texting or tweeting when you just want to make your point fast. How do you apply this principle to your MBA applications? Here are three key areas to practice less is more: Open-ended essays From personal statements to MBA goals essays, being focused and concise is essential. Focus on key details on your work experience, fit with the program, and lessons learned. DO NOT repeat the question or include vague generalizations. For example, there’s no need to state the obvious such as: â€Å"You asked about my goals, so in this space I will tell you about my goals† or â€Å"Each of us faces many key decisions in our lives.† At best, admissions committees, who read far too many generic essays, will just gloss over these parts. At worst they will see them as evidence that you don’t express yourself in a compelling way. Also, don’t succumb to â€Å"pack-it-in-itis† and try to stuff fifteen different stories in these longer essays. Pick the two or three most powerful stories about your experience and/or goals, and polish those until they shine. Interviews The same principle applies here, especially because our tendency to include the unnecessary is amplified by anxiety. A perfect example concerns the dreaded â€Å"Walk me through your resume† request. When we practice this with our MBA clients, over 90% of them start by telling us where they went to college and what their major was, then more or less read their resumes, sometimes point by point, often taking close to 10 minutes. Huge mistake. A much better – and simpler – approach is to say something like, â€Å"My resume shows that I have a strong engineering background, with professional experience that has focused increasingly on business-related problem-solving and leadership.† Then proceed to illustrate each of those three main points with select, high-impact details from the resume. Two or three minutes, tops. Less is more. Additional information essays These are the essays typically used to explain weaknesses: low GPAs; poor test scores; gaps on the resume. Here again our fear of leaving out key information often compels us to include too much, thus diluting the answer. Don’t start this essay with something like, â€Å"Your school has very high academic standards, and I know you prefer that students meet these standards. My grades and test scores are below the standard, so here I wish to explain why and hope that you will not hold these against me.† Too long. Too wordy. Too much information. Instead, remember that less is more and go straight to the main point: â€Å"My GPA and GMAT score do not adequately reflect my academic capabilities.† Then use key information, including numbers (a particularly effective way to practice less is more), to back up your claim. Using less is more is a smart way to impress admissions committees and ultimately end up with more options for graduate school. We can help you focus your essays, trim them back, or help you from the very beginning – check out our catalog of application services here. hbspt.cta.load(58291, '4751002f-5aa9-40d8-bb71-6d43a4318bd2', {}); For 25 years, Accepted has helped applicants gain acceptance to top undergraduate and graduate programs. Our expert team of admissions consultants features former admissions directors, PhDs, and professional writers who have advised clients to acceptance at top programs worldwide including Harvard, Stanford, Yale, Princeton, Penn, Columbia, Oxford, Cambridge, INSEAD, MIT, Caltech, UC Berkeley, and Northwestern. Want an admissions expert  to help you get Accepted? Click here to get in touch! Related Resources: †¢Ã‚  5 Fatal Flaws to Avoid in Your Personal Statement †¢Ã‚  How to Stay Within Essay Word Limits by Reducing Verbal Verbosity †¢ What 3 Essential Ingredients Must You Include in Your Statement of Purpose? Less is More in Your Application Essays Most of us have heard the saying â€Å"less is more,† but how many of us put it into practice when it counts? Your application essays are the perfect forum for reaping the benefits of this deceptively simple principle. What does â€Å"less is more† really mean? It’s the idea that we must resist our natural tendencies to overplay our hands, to choose complexity over simplicity, to include unnecessary details, to say what needn’t be said, to be redundant†¦See what I did there? Often, more information is of less value in getting your point across. Every day we have multiple opportunities to explain ourselves, demonstrate our skills, or express something: speaking in class or at a meeting for work; trying to convince our friends, colleagues, parents, or children of something; or texting or tweeting when you just want to make your point fast. How do you apply this principle to your MBA applications? Here are three key areas to practice less is more: Open-ended essays From personal statements to MBA goals essays, being focused and concise is essential. Focus on key details on your work experience, fit with the program, and lessons learned. DO NOT repeat the question or include vague generalizations. For example, there’s no need to state the obvious such as: â€Å"You asked about my goals, so in this space I will tell you about my goals† or â€Å"Each of us faces many key decisions in our lives.† At best, admissions committees, who read far too many generic essays, will just gloss over these parts. At worst they will see them as evidence that you don’t express yourself in a compelling way. Also, don’t succumb to â€Å"pack-it-in-itis† and try to stuff fifteen different stories in these longer essays. Pick the two or three most powerful stories about your experience and/or goals, and polish those until they shine. Interviews The same principle applies here, especially because our tendency to include the unnecessary is amplified by anxiety. A perfect example concerns the dreaded â€Å"Walk me through your resume† request. When we practice this with our MBA clients, over 90% of them start by telling us where they went to college and what their major was, then more or less read their resumes, sometimes point by point, often taking close to 10 minutes. Huge mistake. A much better – and simpler – approach is to say something like, â€Å"My resume shows that I have a strong engineering background, with professional experience that has focused increasingly on business-related problem-solving and leadership.† Then proceed to illustrate each of those three main points with select, high-impact details from the resume. Two or three minutes, tops. Less is more. Additional information essays These are the essays typically used to explain weaknesses: low GPAs; poor test scores; gaps on the resume. Here again our fear of leaving out key information often compels us to include too much, thus diluting the answer. Don’t start this essay with something like, â€Å"Your school has very high academic standards, and I know you prefer that students meet these standards. My grades and test scores are below the standard, so here I wish to explain why and hope that you will not hold these against me.† Too long. Too wordy. Too much information. Instead, remember that less is more and go straight to the main point: â€Å"My GPA and GMAT score do not adequately reflect my academic capabilities.† Then use key information, including numbers (a particularly effective way to practice less is more), to back up your claim. Using less is more is a smart way to impress admissions committees and ultimately end up with more options for graduate school. We can help you focus your essays, trim them back, or help you from the very beginning – check out our catalog of application services here. hbspt.cta.load(58291, '4751002f-5aa9-40d8-bb71-6d43a4318bd2', {}); For 25 years, Accepted has helped applicants gain acceptance to top undergraduate and graduate programs. Our expert team of admissions consultants features former admissions directors, PhDs, and professional writers who have advised clients to acceptance at top programs worldwide including Harvard, Stanford, Yale, Princeton, Penn, Columbia, Oxford, Cambridge, INSEAD, MIT, Caltech, UC Berkeley, and Northwestern. Want an admissions expert  to help you get Accepted? Click here to get in touch! Related Resources: †¢Ã‚  5 Fatal Flaws to Avoid in Your Personal Statement †¢Ã‚  How to Stay Within Essay Word Limits by Reducing Verbal Verbosity †¢ What 3 Essential Ingredients Must You Include in Your Statement of Purpose?

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